Industry Guide Hardscaping · COMPLIANCE

TCPA & SMS Compliance for Hardscaping Contractors

The TCPA and CAN-SPAM compliance playbook tailored for hardscaping contractors — TCPA class actions don't discriminate by trade size — every SMS to a non-consented number is a $500-$1,500 hit.

TF
By Trailfire
· Updated May 11, 2026 · 8 min read · Built for Hardscaping →

Key Takeaways for Hardscaping

  • Transactional SMS (appointment confirmation, review request after a paver patio with seat wall) needs Prior Express Consent — a lower bar.
  • Marketing SMS (cross-sell, win-back, promotional) needs Prior Express Written Consent — a higher bar with checkbox + disclosure.
  • 10DLC registration is mandatory for business SMS. Without it, carriers throttle or block your messages entirely.
  • Quiet hours: 9 AM-8 PM in the recipient's local timezone. Stricter than federal default, satisfies all state rules.

Why this matters for Hardscaping businesses

Hardscaping businesses send a lot of SMS — appointment reminders, "tech on the way" notifications, review requests, promotional offers. Each non-compliant message exposes you to $500-$1,500 per-violation TCPA penalties. A single class action settles in the $1M-$10M range for businesses your size.

The Hardscaping-specific angle

For hardscaping contractors, the key consent boundary is between transactional and marketing SMS. A review request tied to a completed paver patio with seat wall is transactional — prior express consent suffices (the customer gave you their phone number for service purposes). A win-back campaign or cross-sell promotion ("need a furnace tune-up?" to an AC customer) is marketing — requires prior express written consent with a checkbox. License #s also matter on the SMS side if you reference services that require licensing in your state. Your license-required states for hardscaping include: California (for projects over thresholds), Massachusetts HIC, some others under contractor or landscape-contractor licensing.

A hardscaping business sending 1,000 marketing SMS without proper PEWC consent is exposed to $500,000-$1.5M in TCPA liability. The plaintiffs' bar specializes in finding these.

How Stoneworks Hardscape would set this up

Consider Stoneworks Hardscape, a hardscaping operation serving Boston, MA. A typical paver patio with seat wall job at the 312 Beacon Hill address triggers the following automation:

  1. Technician taps "Job Complete" in the field — paver patio with seat wall marked done.
  2. 4 hours later, Anita receives an SMS asking for a Google review.
  3. Review request mentions walkway install specifically — feeds Local Pack keyword relevance.
  4. If Anita leaves a 4+ star review, a 25-card postcard campaign fires to neighbors around 312 Beacon Hill.
  5. Anita also gets a referral link — both they and a referred neighbor get a discount on the next job.
  6. Compliance: 9 AM-8 PM quiet hours respected, opt-out logged, license # auto-included on postcards where required.

Read the full pillar guide

This page covers the hardscaping-specific angle. For the complete mechanics — full timing tables, all the templates, the FTC and TCPA detail, and the response-framework playbooks — read the foundational pillar:

Pillar Guide

TCPA & CAN-SPAM Compliance for Service Businesses

The comprehensive playbook covering every angle of this topic for local service businesses.

Read the full pillar guide

More Hardscaping Guides

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Built for Hardscaping businesses

Trailfire automates the playbook in this guide for hardscaping contractors — review requests, neighborhood postcards, referrals, and compliance — wired together as one growth engine.

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